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The Times They Are a-Chan­gin' as Bob Dylan said in his 1964 hit song; however, the song that we are singing here in Oklahoma seems to be a rendition of last year’s song, and that is the Drought Is Here Once Again. The drought and heat plaguing much of the middle of the United States has crept its way back into Okla­homa. In 2011, Oklahoma set the US record for the highest monthly average temperature at 89 degrees. In fact, several areas of the state recorded 43 consecutive days exceeding 100 degrees. Several farm ponds completely dried up in the withering heat. Many live­stock producers were forced to liquidate their herds because they had no pastures and could not afford to feed hay, which had to be trucked in from states
Goat Newsletter
Cooperative Extension Program
Langston University
The Newsletter of the E (Kika) de la Garza American Institute for Goat Research Summer 2012The Cooperative Extension Program at Langston University provides educational programs to individuals regardless of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, age disability or status as a veteran. Issued in furtherance of Extension work, Act of September 29, 1977, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
From the Director’s Deskfar to the north. However, in the first four months of 2012, the rains were plentiful and we were back to a normal year. Since then the heavens have dried up and the heat has been turned up a degree or two. We are not complaining. Although it is now hot and dry, 2011 was worse. Last year, the drought and heat were centered in Oklahoma and Texas but this year both are more widespread throughout the central United States. I know that I am not telling you anything new.
What bothers me is that some experts claim that the country’s current drought may be on par with the great droughts of the 1930s and 1950s and that the outlook for short-term relief is bleak. Predictions call for drought to persist or intensify over much of the United States, includ­ing Oklahoma, throughout the summer and maybe even into the fall.
More importantly for ani­mal agriculture, if the drought and heat continue as long-term effects, then the impacts will be devastating. In a recent USA Today newspaper article, it was predicated that the heat and drought wreaking havoc on much of the United States will soon hit the supermarkets: It reported that cheese and milk prices will rise first and corn and meat will probably not be far behind. High tem­peratures equate to less milk production. In addition, feed prices have sky-rocketed in the past few years [Thanks to the subsidies for ethanol but I’ll not go there]. A Wisconsin dairy farmer told a USA Today reporter that "I`m looking at a corn crop that`s 75% and 100% gone. If I have to go into the market and buy that corn, it will take me between two and three years to recover." So it’s too hot and too dry to grow corn and it’s too expensive to buy. Dairy farmers are feel­ing the proverbial financial pinch.
Several of our Langston University scientists just re­turned from the annual joint meetings of the American Society of Animal Science and the American Dairy Science Association. These meetings were appropriately held in Phoenix, AZ and one of the most popular sessions was on meeting the needs of cows under heat stress.
I wonder what the long-

The Times They Are a-Chan­gin' as Bob Dylan said in his 1964 hit song; however, the song that we are singing here in Oklahoma seems to be a rendition of last year’s song, and that is the Drought Is Here Once Again. The drought and heat plaguing much of the middle of the United States has crept its way back into Okla­homa. In 2011, Oklahoma set the US record for the highest monthly average temperature at 89 degrees. In fact, several areas of the state recorded 43 consecutive days exceeding 100 degrees. Several farm ponds completely dried up in the withering heat. Many live­stock producers were forced to liquidate their herds because they had no pastures and could not afford to feed hay, which had to be trucked in from states
Goat Newsletter
Cooperative Extension Program
Langston University
The Newsletter of the E (Kika) de la Garza American Institute for Goat Research Summer 2012The Cooperative Extension Program at Langston University provides educational programs to individuals regardless of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, age disability or status as a veteran. Issued in furtherance of Extension work, Act of September 29, 1977, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
From the Director’s Deskfar to the north. However, in the first four months of 2012, the rains were plentiful and we were back to a normal year. Since then the heavens have dried up and the heat has been turned up a degree or two. We are not complaining. Although it is now hot and dry, 2011 was worse. Last year, the drought and heat were centered in Oklahoma and Texas but this year both are more widespread throughout the central United States. I know that I am not telling you anything new.
What bothers me is that some experts claim that the country’s current drought may be on par with the great droughts of the 1930s and 1950s and that the outlook for short-term relief is bleak. Predictions call for drought to persist or intensify over much of the United States, includ­ing Oklahoma, throughout the summer and maybe even into the fall.
More importantly for ani­mal agriculture, if the drought and heat continue as long-term effects, then the impacts will be devastating. In a recent USA Today newspaper article, it was predicated that the heat and drought wreaking havoc on much of the United States will soon hit the supermarkets: It reported that cheese and milk prices will rise first and corn and meat will probably not be far behind. High tem­peratures equate to less milk production. In addition, feed prices have sky-rocketed in the past few years [Thanks to the subsidies for ethanol but I’ll not go there]. A Wisconsin dairy farmer told a USA Today reporter that "I`m looking at a corn crop that`s 75% and 100% gone. If I have to go into the market and buy that corn, it will take me between two and three years to recover." So it’s too hot and too dry to grow corn and it’s too expensive to buy. Dairy farmers are feel­ing the proverbial financial pinch.
Several of our Langston University scientists just re­turned from the annual joint meetings of the American Society of Animal Science and the American Dairy Science Association. These meetings were appropriately held in Phoenix, AZ and one of the most popular sessions was on meeting the needs of cows under heat stress.
I wonder what the long-